scholarly journals A Framework-Based Approach to Assessing Mental Health Impacts of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Children and Adolescents

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ping-I Lin ◽  
Gautam Srivastava ◽  
Linda Beckman ◽  
Yunhwan Kim ◽  
Maria Hallerbäck ◽  
...  

The COVID-19 pandemic has yielded extensive impacts globally in the year of 2020. Although the mental health of children and adolescents may be particularly susceptible to stressors stemming from the pandemic and anti-contagion policies, most ongoing efforts are geared toward curbing the viral spread. In the current perspective, we have identified four domains of factors corresponding to an ecological framework that may directly or indirectly influence the mental health of children and adolescents during the pandemic. The evidence suggests that anti-contagion policies might trigger cascades that impact the mental health of children and their families through multiple different sectors that used to form a safety net for youths. Additionally, children with neuropsychiatric disorders could experience exacerbated symptoms during the pandemic. Furthermore, the risk of domestic violence has surged during the pandemic, which further compounds the imminent mental health crisis. A mental health pandemic could be inevitable if no proactive prevention strategies were in place. Therefore, we recommend understanding each individual mental health risk pathway via the ecological framework in order to develop integrative prevention and intervention strategies.

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emma Frankham

WORKING PAPER Is socioeconomic status a predictor of mental health-related 911 calls independent of mental health? Answering this question is important because knowing which factors are associated with mental health-related calls could influence effective resource allocation. I analyze census tract- level data across three cities and find that a lack of financial resources is positively associated with mental health-related calls, independent of poor mental health. I argue that individuals of low socioeconomic status rely on this public safety net more so than affluent individuals, and that this is an under-recognized mechanism by which individuals of low socioeconomic status with mental illness come into contact with police.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Deb Levine ◽  
Claudia Page

UNSTRUCTURED COVID-19 is having major repercussions for children and adolescents’ mental health and well-being.Children and youth who are low-income, marginally housed, and in the throes of trauma and/or abuse are particularly vulnerable, as the public safety net upon which they rely was unable to address a documented mental health crisis that existed well before the pandemic. current efforts to provide laptops and internet hotspots for distance learning during COVID-19 offers an opportunity to connect more children to their mental health providers post-pandemic.


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